Leek Post & Times

New attitude to violence against girls and women

Victims’ behaviour should not be main focus

- Kerry Ashdown kerry.ashdown@reachplc.com

FOCUS is shifting from how women and girls act to challengin­g the behaviour of their attackers, Staffordsh­ire’s chief constable has said.

More than 17,000 violent crimes were committed against women and girls in Staffordsh­ire and Stoke on Trent during a 12-month period, a police performanc­e report has revealed.

The city saw 35 per cent of incidents 6,200 in total - while 11,374 (65 per cent) were reported in Staffordsh­ire between December 2020 and November 2021.

The report says: “The problem cannot be solved by policing alone and requires a wider societal response and commitment to improve the lives and experience­s of women and girls.”

Chief Constable Chris Noble told the latest police performanc­e meeting: “Quite rightly, a lot of the work we and our partners do is about keeping people safe, is about street lighting and focusing on particular premises.

“But fundamenta­lly I think the big shift for policing is focusing on the perpetrato­rs, challengin­g people because of their behaviour, where they are and what they’re doing and focusing this on the offenders and the offending behaviour - as opposed to at times quite a patronisin­g, if not offensive, approach, telling people how much they should drink and what they should wear.

“This feels different to me - there is at least an intention to treat this differentl­y.”

The approach was welcomed by police, fire and crime commission­er Ben Adams and his deputy, Helen Fisher.

Mrs Fisher said: “It is good to hear it’s not about women’s behaviour, how they dress and what they have to drink. It’s the men, the perpetrato­rs..”

Mr Adams said: “That is exactly the sort of message women want to hear.”

Mr Noble said work to tackle violence against women and girls also involved focusing on police conduct.

When he was appointed to the top post last year he vowed to take a zero tolerance approach to any unacceptab­le officer behaviour after a former Met Police officer Wayne Couzens was convicted of murdering Sarah Everard after tricking her into getting into a car by pretending he was arresting her for a Covid-19 lockdown breach.

Mr Noble said: “I think it very much starts from within policing, about being very honest about the standards and behaviours we have.

“Very often police officers will have sole access to very vulnerable women and girls and it’s incredibly important we don’t add to their harm or trauma, but they can trust us and we are key to bringing offenders to justice and helping them start to recover from what’s happened.

“We’ve seen some of the highest profile cases involving people who should have had the highest levels of public trust and confidence in their behaviour.

“I think that’s something that feels very close to the bone, quite rightly, for policing in terms of our standards and what the public expect of us. And that needs to be earned, it’s not given.”

 ?? ?? Chief Constable Chris Noble has signalled a shift in the police’s focus from how women and girls act to challengin­g the behaviour of violent men
Chief Constable Chris Noble has signalled a shift in the police’s focus from how women and girls act to challengin­g the behaviour of violent men
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